Interesting, unknown and fun facts about The Little Mermaid

Little Mermaid is known as a fairy tale and a movie, but there is much more to find in the background of the story. Here are some interesting facts!

The Little Mermaid is a very successful movie (three parts so far), made after popular fairy tale by Hans Christian Andersen. While most people know few interesting facts (including some controversy) about the Disney product, the background story of Hans Christian Andersen's Little Mermaid is almost unknown, but can offer much more food for thought.

If you are trivia and fairy tales amuse you, here is your chance to check ...

Top 10 Little Mermaid interesting facts

Little Mermaid is not Andersen's original work.

1. It's written after Undine by de la Motte Fouque, one of the probably the most popular books in the world in 19th century. Undine, sometimes called Ondine or Undina, is a love story about the water spirit (name probably comes from Latin unda - wave) who wants to get an immortal soul but has to marry a mortal and have a kid with him.

2. Undine was not a complete original as well. It is based on different folktales about Melusine (also Melusina) and works by Paracelsus, who associated her with Aphrodite, love, water and sexuality. Mermaids are an important part of folklore all over the world and stories about them are still in high demand.

3. The evolution of Little Mermaid didn't stop with Andersen, who tried to upgrade the love story into a spiritual and religious quest. Disney made a new turn, with returning to the basic plot, simplifying and emphasizing good versus evil fight and basically changing it in family fun.

Andersen's Little Mermaid wasn't meant for children

4. There is a strong theory with many supporters claiming this fairy tales wasn't initially written for public. The only audience should be the Danish writer's unrequited love Edvard Collin. The famous storyteller who was attracted by men and women (but never managed to built an intimate relationship with either) wrote this tale in the time of Edvard's marriage with Henriette Thyberg in 1936 (fairy tale was first published in 1937).

5. Characters in Little Mermaid were designed after real people and settings described after real places.

Little Mermaid was, of course, the writer himself, who often mentioned his feminine side in private letters, the prince was Edvard and his wife Henriette.

Just like the title character in the story couldn't do any harm to the happy couple, in a reality Hans Christian stayed friend with both and they were even buried in the same grave.

6. Disney company followed the same pattern as the Danish fairy tale writer, but with their signature humorous twists. Ariel was drawn after actress Alicia Milano (face and body), script writer Sherri Stoner (body movement) and astronaut Sally Ride (hair movement), the villain Ursula was designed after drag queen Divine, but for trivia lovers there are even more interesting facts: you can see many famous Disney characters in the crowd of sea people (Donald, Goofy, Kermit, Mickey, characters from Cinderella and Snow White, ...), singing scene on the rock was designed after the statue of mermaid on the rock in Copenhagen, some scenes were borrowed from other Disney movies, ...

Little Mermaid by Hans Tegner

7. The ultimate autobiography

Andersen wrote several autobiographies during his life and almost all of his fairy tales carry recognizable autobiographical elements. He often used names and characteristics of real people for characters in his stories, but Little Mermaid is probably his ultimate autobiography.

Through Little Mermaid's quest for love and immortal soul, we can see and understand Andersen's ambition to become famous, climbing the social ladder, inability to express his true feelings and final settling with this life which will be repaid in after-life.

Strong color symbolism

Little Mermaid by Anne Anderson

8. Blue is (understandably) the major color in the story. It is a color of water and air, but not a color of life. It's the color of heaven. Although mermaids already are surrounded with blue, we can understand Little Mermaid's search for love can be only one step toward the higher goal - heaven, which is accessible only by getting the immortal soul (and this comes with love).

9. Red is the other important color in this fairy tale. It's of course a color of life and passion, but also a color of sin, which should be defeated before the mermaid can get into heaven. Red is much more popular color in fairy tales than blue, the reason is probably the fairy tales are created as reflections of life, not philosophical thoughts.

Daughters of the Air

10. The Little Mermaid wasn't considered as a title at first. In the last scene she is dissolving into sea foam, but then we find out she is rising upwards in a company of so-called daughters of the air. Although this part looks a bit artificial and was actually added after first writing (where everything ends with dissolving of Little Mermaid), Andersen later claimed he wanted the final ending with her flying up, without worries of this world and on the sure path to her final goal - immortality from the very beginning and the working title of original Little Mermaid was actually Daughters of the air.

Can you see The Little Mermaid in a different light now?

Glad to hear that, Sheri_Oz. We are often unaware of the presence of colors, if the story is well written / told. But on the other hand we almost expect gold (in many cases interchangeable with red) in fairy tales, right?Thanks for stopping by!

Well, JoHarrington, if we dig for a while, everything and everybody is connected:) Melusine is almost unknown in our part of the world and we were introduced to Little Mermaid in times when the word God was almost forbidden, so you can imagine how much we still have to explore ... By the way, in Central and Eastern Europe mermaids are less popular than mermen. Don't ask me why!